Showing posts with label barlow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label barlow. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Howard Hanson leads Americana for Solo Winds


A little homage today to Howard Hanson and his tireless efforts to promote, educate, and record modern American music of the midcentury. This is volume 4 of Mercury's "American Music Festival" series, MG40003, recorded in 1954 at the Eastman Theatre. Here, we have pieces written for solo winds accompanied by string orchestra.

The composers on this record are pretty much forgotten, what with the exception of Hanson and Copland. Bernard Rogers, Homer Keller, Kent Kennan, and Wayne Barlow were contemporaries of Howard Hanson and worked with him frequently at the Eastman School. All of them write in what might be called a "romantic" style which features lovely melodies and easy harmonies. It's conservative music led by a conservative composer conductor who reveled in full, rich, string passages and welcomed extended solo lines for woodwinds.  This is a lovely album and a bit of an antidote to the spiky rhythms and often disjointed melodic lines of these composers' colleagues on the other side of the spectrum.

I don't think that enough can be said for the work done by Howard Hanson and Robert Whitney to promote and argue the validity of modern American composition during their lifetimes. These recorded documents remind us of a time when offering and nurturing culture to the masses really mattered.

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